| Literature DB >> 16446263 |
Kathleen Ell1, Jurgen Unützer, Maria Aranda, Kathleen Sanchez, Pey-Jiuan Lee.
Abstract
This study aimed to examine: the prevalence and correlates of depression among adults age 65 and over on admission to diverse home health care programs; nurse compliance with routine screening using the PHQ-9; and concordance between the number of depressed individuals identified by the PHQ-9 and Medicare-mandated nursing assessment following targeted nurse training in identifying depression among the elderly using a standard diagnostic screen. Data are drawn from routine screening of 9,178 patients (a 77% screening compliance rate). Of all patients screened, 782 (8.5%) met criteria for probable major depression and 148 (1.6%) for mild depression. Concordance between nurse identified depression via PHQ-9 and OASIS depression assessment improved over that reported in previous studies. Findings suggest that the use of a routine screening tool for depression can be implemented with minimal in-house training and improves detection of depression among older adults with significant physical and functional impairment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16446263 PMCID: PMC1421520 DOI: 10.1300/J027v24n04_01
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Home Health Care Serv Q ISSN: 0162-1424